Suspect in German neo-Nazi murder trial speaks for 1st time

Terror suspect Beate Zschaepe arrives at the court room besides her lawyers Hermann Borchert, left, and Mathias Grasel in Munich, Germany, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2016. Zschaepe is accused of being involved in 10 neo-Nazi murders of the National Socialist Underground group, which allegedly killed eight Turkish men, a Greek and a policewoman between 2000 and 2007. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader) (The Associated Press)

A German woman on trial for being part of a neo-Nazi group suspected of killing 10 people has spoken in court for the first time to disavow the nationalist ideas she once believed in.

Beate Zschaepe is accused of membership in the National Socialist Underground, or NSU, which carried out a seven-year murder spree targeting mostly immigrants. The other two core members of the group died in November 2011 following a botched robbery.

Zschaepe told the Munich court on Thursday that she once identified with "elements of nationalist ideology." German news agency dpa quoted her as saying she now judges people "not by their origin or political mindset but according to their behavior."

Zschaepe's trial began in May 2013 and is expected to continue into next year.